All rights are covered by the Geneva convention. A broad classification of the what the convention covers: General observations
Quarters, food and clothing
Hygiene and medical attention
The treatment of enemy medical personnel and chaplains retained to assist prisoners of war
Religious, intellectual and physical activities
Discipline
Military rank
Transfer of prisoners of war after their arrival in a camp Section 6 covers the relations between prisoners of war and the detaining authorities: it is broken down into three chapters. Complaints of prisoners of war respecting the conditions of captivity
Where there is no senior officer available in a camp the section stipulates that "prisoners shall freely elect by secret ballot, [a representative] every six months". The representative, whether the senior officer or an elected person, acts as a conduit between the authorities of the detaining power and the prisoners.
The sub-section on "Penal and disciplinary sanctions" is subdivided into three parts:
General provisions Disciplinary sanctions Juridicial proceedings
Concentration Camps
because more then likely they did somthing bad so they put them in there:]
In Germany and surrounding countries Jews had no rights and at the very best of times they had severely limited rights. Before being thrown into concentration camps Jews were put into ghettos, had a curfew, and could only shop at Jewish stores, amongst other things.
what wer some events that went on in the death camps in auschwitz? what wer some events that went on in the death camps in auschwitz?
Preserve life is the proficiency that defines captivity models of prisoners of war, peacetime government detention, and hostage detention.
Concentration Camps
The inmates of concentration camps had no rights at all.
There were 110,000 - 120,000 sent to the camps during WW2.
Japanese in California were relocated to detention camps in 1942
unhappily detained in detention camps
One noted example was Franklin Roosevelt's order 9066 of 1942 which placed some 7000 Japanese- Americans into detention camps.
because more then likely they did somthing bad so they put them in there:]
They were called concentration camps.
They were called concentration camps.
No, they were not concentration camps as the Germans built. They were Detention camps to keep the Japanese-American people under observation.
Yes, concentration camps are still used today in some parts of the world, such as in China where Uighur Muslims are detained in internment camps. These camps have drawn international condemnation for their human rights abuses and violations.
Arbitrary detention violates basic human rights by imprisoning individuals without proper legal justification or due process.